From Publishers Weekly
In this clever and highly entertaining natural history of the future (and companion to the recent seven-part series on the Animal Planet cable channel), geologist and paleontologist Dixon and natural history television special-producer Adams imagine what life on Earth will be like over the next 200 million years. Using approximately 110 computer-generated illustrations of the planet's evolution, the authors fill this sprawling supercontinent, which they call Pangaea II, with amazing new creatures like the flying great blue windrunner, the oceanic sharkopath and the colossal forest-dwelling megasquid, which combines the body of an elephant with the tentacles of a squid and the face of Jabba the Hut from Star Wars. The creatures are presented with an amazing amount of detail; by imagining a living future, the authors, assisted by advisers in all areas of science, hope "to ensure that the plants and animals of our future worlds are viable, and could evolve from existing species in the time available." While some of the illustrations border on the cartoonish, the majority of them are quite realistic and will captivate the minds of children and young adults; the high quality of the research and writing in each provocative chapter clearly presents a great deal of scientific information in a way that will engage and challenge teenage and adult readers.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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From School Library Journal
Grade 6-10-A companion to the television series by the same name, this work speculates on the evolution of the Earth and its beings, minus human life, over the next 5, 100, and 200 million years. An introductory section discusses the eras of the planet's life through the human period and theorizes on future developments. A look into the near future shows the end of the Human era in the next few thousand years followed by an ice age. The end of human domination allows natural evolution to take place among the surviving creatures; they develop in surprising ways and inhabit an Earth vastly different from our own. Colorful and imaginative computer-generated artwork alongside a readable and interesting text combine to create a believable hypothesis. Readers will be able to combine the information on evolution, natural selection, and ecological habitats to have a greater understanding of the Earth's environment today. It should be noted that sections of this work are nearly identical to Claire Pye's The Wild World of the Future (Firefly, 2003), for a younger audience.
Eva Elisabeth VonAncken, Trinity-Pawling School, Pawling, NYCopyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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